Showing posts with label Crash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crash. Show all posts

Sunday, 10 August 2014

Airplane crashes on takeoff in Iran

An Iranian regional passenger plane crashed Sunday while taking off from the capital, Tehran, killing 48 people onboard, state media reported.
The aircraft, an Iran-140 typically used for short domestic flights, crashed near Tehran's Mehrabad airport, Iran's state-run IRNA news agency reported. The plane went down in a residential area after its engine went out, the agency reported.
Iranian state television said 48 people were killed in the crash: 40 passengers and eight crew members. The plane, operated by Sepahan Air, was heading to Tabas, a town in eastern Iran. It took off at 9:20 a.m. local time and crashed shortly afterward.
Members of the Revolutionary Guard worked to secure the crash site and security and rescue personnel combed the wreckage as onlookers gathered shortly after the plane went down. The plane's mangled but largely intact tail section was torn from the fuselage and came to rest on a nearby road.
The Iran-140 is a twin-engine turboprop plane based on Ukrainian technology that is assembled under license in Iran. It is a version of the Antonov An-140 regional plane and can carry up to 52 passengers.
Mehrabad, located in western Tehran, is the busier of two main airports serving the Iranian capital, and primarily handles domestic flights. Most international flights use the newer Imam Khomeini International Airport.
Iran has suffered a series of airplane crashes, blamed on its aging aircraft and poor maintenance. Many of the Boeing aircraft in state-run Iran Air's fleet were bought before the country's 1979 Islamic Revolution, which disrupted ties with the U.S. and Europe.
Iranian airlines, including those run by the state, are chronically strapped for cash, and maintenance has suffered, experts say. U.S. sanctions prevent Iran from updating its American aircraft and make it difficult to get European spare parts or planes as well. The country has come to rely on Russian aircraft, many of them Soviet-era planes that are harder to get parts for since the Soviet Union's fall.
In March of this year, a small plane belonging to the State Aviation Organization crashed while on a test flight near the tourist resort of Kish Island, killing all four crew members.
The last major airliner crash in Iran happened in January 2011, when an Iran Air Boeing 727 broke to pieces on impact while trying an emergency landing in a snowstorm in northwestern Iran, killing at least 77 people.
In July 2009, a Russian-made jetliner crashed in northwest Iran shortly after taking off from the capital, killing all 168 on board. A Russian-made Ilyushin 76 carrying members of the Revolutionary Guard crashed in the mountains of southeastern Iran in February 2003, killing 302 people aboard.

Sunday, 22 June 2014

Asiana Crash Debate Goes Beyond Pilots to Automation

U.S. investigators are debating whether to blame a Boeing Co. (BA) jetliner’s design for helping cause a cascade of pilot mistakes in last year’s Asiana Airlines Inc.  crash that killed three Chinese teenagers.
The sticking point within the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, in the days before its final decision is due, is over the extent to which Boeing’s automatic throttle contributed to the plane’s loss of speed before it slammed into a seawall in San Francisco on July 6, said three people with knowledge of the discussions. They asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak.
The safety board tomorrow will decide on the probable cause and other factors leading to Seoul-based Asiana’s crash, the first in the U.S. with passenger deaths in more than four years. While there’s little doubt the pilots made multiple mistakes, a finding that equipment on the 777-200 jet confused them could open Chicago-based Boeing to greater liability in lawsuits and shade public opinion.
“There’s quite a flurry of activity” in the days leading up to the NTSB’s findings in a major accident, Peter Goelz, who served as managing director of the agency during the 1990s, said in an interview.
Such debate is consistent with prior investigations as the NTSB’s five-member board and staff hammer out nuances of what caused tragedies, Goelz said.
The NTSB has several options to address the role of the auto-throttle design. It can include it as part of the cause, list it as a “contributing factor,” or make recommendations for safety improvements that mention the equipment’s role.

Pilot Error

The plane crashed after the Asiana pilots allowed it to get almost 40 miles (64 kilometers) per hour slower than the target speed as they neared the runway.
Both Boeing and Asiana, which gave their recommended conclusions to the NTSB in March, laid primary responsibility for the accident on the pilots.
The airline and planemaker differ over whether other issues were at play.
Boeing maintains the accident was solely the crew’s fault and would have been avoided if the pilots had aborted the landing, as required under airline procedures, Miles Kotay, a spokesman, said in a June 20 e-mail.
“The airplane and all airplane systems were functioning as expected prior to impact and did not contribute to the accident,” Boeing said in its submission to the NTSB earlier this year.

Automated Systems

Asiana urged the safety board in its March submission to find that the auto-throttle was a cause of the pilots’ mistakes. It also said the NTSB should recommend that the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration require Boeing to add a cockpit warning when speeds get too slow.
Groups with a stake in the outcome have met with the safety board’s politically appointed members in recent weeks in an attempt to influence the process, as is often the case before conclusions are announced on major accidents, one person familiar with the proceedings said.
The 777, like Boeing’s 737 and 787, has a suite of computer-driven tools in the cockpit to help reduce pilots’ workload. Such automation, which has also been adopted in similar ways by Airbus Group NV, is credited with helping reduce accidents and improve efficiency.
At the same time, pilot misunderstandings about automation have been studied for 20 years and linked to accidents, David Woods, a systems engineering professor at Ohio State University, said in an interview.
“This is an old story,” Woods said.

Fatal Descent

Recent accidents, such as the Feb. 25, 2009, crash of a Turkish Airlines Inc. Boeing 737-800 on approach to Amsterdam that killed nine, have been linked to confusion over automation, he said. Woods called it the “creeping complexity” of the cockpit.
A FAA study released last year found that pilots’ reliance on cockpit automation systems has led to occasional confusion and new safety risks.
In the San Francisco accident, Captain Lee Kang Kuk, a veteran with Asiana who was being trained on the 777 wide-body, accidentally switched off the jetliner’s automatic speed control as he was trying to descend, according to NTSB documents.
The plane’s tail broke loose as it hit the seawall, and the fuselage then bounced and spun down the runway. The three girls who died may have been flung from the jet because they weren’t wearing seatbelts, according to statements to investigators by unidentified witnesses traveling with them.
More than 200 people were taken to hospitals. The plane held 291 passengers, 12 flight attendants and four pilots.

Minimum Speed

In almost all settings, the plane’s auto-throttle will prevent it from getting too slow, even if it’s switched off. Lee, 45, didn’t realize he’d put the jet into a rare mode that disabled this safety measure by making a series of changes to the auto pilot and throttles.
He “believed the auto-throttle should have come out of the idle position to prevent the airplane going below the minimum speed” for landing, the NTSB said in a summary of an interview with him. “That was the theory at least, as he understood it.”
Another Asiana captain, Lee Jung Min, 49, an instructor, was seated in the co-pilot’s seat.

First Fatalities

The pilots neglected to notice a runway light system showing they were too low, didn’t monitor their speed and didn’t follow airline procedures to abort a landing if they weren’t properly lined up for touchdown, according to information released already by the NTSB.
The 777, the world’s largest twin-engine jetliner, entered commercial service in 1995. Last year’s accident was the first involving fatalities, and only the third serious enough to destroy a 777. A fourth 777 presumed destroyed is the missing Malaysian Air 777-200ER model, the same as the Asiana jet.
Boeing designed the auto-throttle to aid crews while not replacing them, John Cashman, the company’s chief pilot on the 777 program, told an NTSB board of inquiry on Dec. 11. The crew is “ultimately responsible for the safe conduct of the flight,” Cashman said.

Officials declare reports of plane crash 'unfounded'

Officials determined Sunday morning that the report of a plane crash in Whitewater Township that had crews searching late into the night was "unfounded."

A witness called emergency dispatchers around 8 p.m. Saturday to report what they thought was a plane crash in the 6000 block of Kilby Road. The witness reported seeing the aircraft dive toward the ground then observed a plume of smoke, according to the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office.

Emergency crews from several jurisdictions responded and searched as darkness fell, but were unable to find anything. Several units reported seeing smoke but later confirmed it to be campfires.

There was no indication from local airports of any distress signals or missing flights, authorities say.

The University of Cincinnati Medical Center AirCare helicopter was called to scene to search for wreckage just before 10 p.m., and found a light source that ended up being nothing significant.

The search was terminated for the night around 11 p.m. and picked back up Sunday morning at about 8:30. Officials said they hoped light could aid in the search.

But Sunday morning's search only lasted about an hour before officials from the sheriff's office and Whitewater Township determined the reports about the incident were "unfounded," according to a news release from the sheriff's office.

Friday, 20 June 2014

400 Military Drone Crashes Since 2001

More than 400 large U.S. military drones have crashed in major accidents around the world since 2001, a record of calamity that exposes the potential dangers of throwing open American skies to drone traffic, according to a year-long Washington Post investigation. Since the outbreak of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, military drones have malfunctioned in myriad ways, plummeting from the sky because of mechanical breakdowns, human error, bad weather and other reasons, according to more than 50,000 pages of accident investigation reports and other records obtained by The Post under the Freedom of Information Act.
Defense Department officials said they are confident in the reliability of their drones. Most of the crashes occurred in war, they emphasized, under harsh conditions unlikely to be replicated in the United States. Military statistics show the vast majority of flights go smoothly and that mishap rates have steadily declined over the past decade. Officials acknowledge, however, that drones will never be as safe as commercial jetliners. The Post’s analysis of accident records shows that the military and drone manufacturers have yet to overcome some fundamental safety hurdles: 
1) A limited ability to detect and avoid trouble. Cameras and high-tech sensors on a drone cannot fully replace a pilot’s eyes and ears and nose in the cockpit. 
2) Pilot error. Despite popular peception, flying a drone is trickier than playing a video game. 
3) Persistent mechanical defects. Some drones were designed without backup safety features and rushed to war without extensive testing. 
4) Unreliable communications links. Drones are dependent on wireless connections that can be fragile. Records show that links were disrupted or lost in more than a quarter of the worst crashes.

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Eurofighter Jet Crashes Near Spanish Air Base


Madrid, Spain:  The Defence Ministry of Spain says an air force combat jet crashed just before a planned landing at a base in southern Spain, killing the pilot.

Ministry spokesman Miguel Morer said the Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft went down Monday at the end of a routine practice flight at the Moron de la Frontera base near Seville.

The ministry said in a tweet that the pilot, Capt. Fernando Lluna Carrascosa, died in the crash close to the end of a runway.

The ministry said the cause of the accident was being investigated.

Friday, 16 May 2014

Airline employees who stole luggage in aftermath of Asiana crash in San Francisco last year sentenced to nine and six months prison



A husband and his wife, both United Airlines employees, were sentenced Tuesday to prison time for stealing luggage from passengers whose flights were diverted or cancelled in the aftermath of the Asiana Airlines crash at San Francisco International Airport last summer. Sean Sharif Crudup, 44, and Raychas Elizabeth Thomas, 32, both of Richmond, California, pleaded no contest to grand theft and possessing stolen property. They received sentences of nine months and six months, respectively, according to the Los Angeles Times.

They also received probation of three years and were ordered to pay $6,000 in restitutution, with most of that amount going to the high-end department store Nordstrom. Some of the passengers' whose luggage was stolen was headed from San Francisco to the Cayman. The luggage contained jewelry and clothing worth about $30,000.

'Ms. Thomas had taken a bunch of the clothing to Nordstrom to sell it back,' San Mateo County District Attorney Wagstaffe said at the time of the couple’s arrest last July. 'A search warrant was issued for their home in Richmond, and a large number of the items were found there.'

They were arrested at the San Francisco airport on July 25, 2013, as they were about to board a flight to Hawaii. Some of the items Crudup and Thomas stole from other people's luggage was found in their possession. A subsequent search of their home found even more stolen items, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Thomas will surrender to custody in December to start serving time, while Crudup will follow in December.

The Asiana crash on July 6, 2013 killed three Chinese students on board the flight from Seoul. More than 200 other people were injured. The accident wreaked havoc on the San Francisco airport for days, cancelling flights and diverting others.

Monday, 12 May 2014

Firefighter Sues Over Being Blamed In SFO Asiana Crash Death

A San Francisco firefighter claimed in a lawsuit filed Friday that Fire Department officials falsely identified her as having driven the rig that fatally struck a teenage survivor of last year's Asiana Airlines crash. Elyse Duckett, 49, was made a "sacrificial lamb" so department leaders wouldn't have to answer further questions about the Fire Department's response to the crash July 6 at San Francisco International Airport, said the suit filed in San Francisco Superior Court.
Three passengers died, including 16-year-old Ye Meng Yuan of China. She survived the crash but was killed when she was run over by two rigs as she lay on the ground near the Boeing 777's left wing. 
"Elyse was a scapegoat so there wouldn't be a magnifying glass on all the other things that went wrong," including a breakdown in command procedures, radio communications and the triaging of victims, said her attorney, Eduardo Roy.
Duckett, who has been with the Fire Department for 24 years, was away from the airport shopping for groceries when the Asiana flight crashed on landing, according to the suit. Duckett raced back to the airport, climbed into a fire rig and headed out to the scene. By the time she got there, the suit says, Ye had already been killed by another fire rig and her body was obscured in flame-retardant foam. Duckett's rig then ran over the girl, the suit says.
The San Mateo County Coroner's Office determined that Ye was alive before being struck by the rigs, but an autopsy report did not say which rig killed her. Duckett's suit says fire officials blamed her for Ye's death, even though they knew that the other rig, driven by firefighter Jimmy Yee, had been the first to hit the girl. Fire officials singled out Duckett because as an African American lesbian and single mother, she does not fit into the "fraternal" Fire Department, Roy said.
"She doesn't travel in packs," Roy said. "There is only one African American lesbian. ... So what do you do? You pick on the weaker, smaller group."
Fire Department officials subjected Duckett to a "surprise interrogation" at which they tried to pin Ye's death on her and later leaked her name to the media, the suit says.
The suit asks that department leaders acknowledge that Duckett did nothing wrong and identify whoever leaked her name. Duckett is also seeking $300,000 in damages. Mindy Talmadge, a spokeswoman for the Fire Department, declined to comment on the lawsuit. But generally, Talmadge said, Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White is proud of "all of the first responders who responded to the Asiana incident and performed extremely well under the extraordinary circumstances."

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

FAA tells Boeing to fix 747-8 software to avoid crash

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration on Tuesday ordered an immediate fix to the latest version of Boeing Co's  747-8 plane, saying a software glitch could cause it to lose thrust when close to landing and fly into the ground.
The FAA's so-called airworthiness directive covers Boeing's 747-8 and 747-8F planes with certain General Electric Co engines. It calls for replacing defective software with a new, improved version.

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Malaysia says missing plane may have turned back

Malaysia on Sunday said a missing airliner carrying 239 people may have inexplicably turned back as authorities launched a terror probe into the plane's sudden disappearance, investigating suspect passengers who boarded with stolen passports.

The United States sent the FBI to investigate after Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing

Thursday, 27 February 2014

Asiana Airlines Fined $500,000

In the first penalty of its kind, federal transportation officials docked Asiana Airlines $500,000 for failing to promptly contact passengers' families and keep them informed about their loved ones after a deadly crash last year at San Francisco International airport.